More than 1.5 million children were sent and killed at concentration camps. Many children died from either starvation or catching a deadly disease ,but most children died by being gassed to death in a gas chamber. Before entering concentration camps these children had regular lives. They went to school and had normal lives. They later got moved to ghettos and then to concentration camps. At concentration camps the children were seperated from their parents and siblings.In a matter of a couple of months, their entire lives changed
Over the course of twelve years more than 40,000 concentration camps were established by the Nazi party. They used these camps to isolate Jewish people from the rest of the world. The concentration camps consisted of electric fences ,watchtowers, and a chain connected to automatic machine guns. More than ten million people were killed during the holocaust and many people died in concentration camps. They died because starvation,diseases,and worst of all ,gas chambers. In the concentration camps there was many diseases spread throughout the camp. Many people died from starvation while others died from tuberculosis. Most prisoners
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A gas chamber is a sealed quarter where poisonous gas is introduced. It was designed for mass murders and killings. The Nazi’s used these chambers to try to eliminate the Jewish race. The first experimental use of the gas chambers used Zyklon B and took place at Auschwitz. In many times, so much Zyklon B was used that it stained the walls of the chambers blue. The largest gas chambers could hold around 2,000 people each. At the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp at least 6,000 people were killed each day in the gas chambers by the Nazi Party. Only 9 out of ten of the captives were actually Jewish. At first the Nazi Party only put physically disabled or mentally unstable people in gas chambers. They only killed the people who they thought were “unworthy of
Gas chambers took a big part in Nazi’s killing their victims. There could be up to 100 people at a time in the gas chamber. Zyklon-B, a poisonous cyanide, was used to release through vents of the gas chamber. After about and hour, everyone is dead, leaving nothing but their statues like bodies, urine, and feces. This slow process took the lives of over 10K people.
Hunter:How would you feel if at the age of 9 you were sent to a Nazi concentration camp? Marion Blumenthal Lazan had this happen to her.
During World War II, millions of people were forcefully taken and placed into Nazi concentration camps. In the time between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany established thousands of concentration camps all across Europe. These camps were used for many cruel purposes such as forced-labor camps, transit camps which served as temporary way stations, and extermination camps built primarily or exclusively for mass murder. When the Holocaust finally came to an end, a total of over 11 million people were estimated to have been murdered in concentration camps, leaving only a small fraction of those imprisoned to survive. All in all, Nazi concentration camps left a stain of fear on the hearts of millions of innocent people.
Nazi Concentration Camps were places that treated Jews horribly. They treated them like slaves. The Nazis had a lot of different methods for killing the Jews. Sometimes they would wait for them to die of age or sickness, and right before they died they would basically make them bury their own grave. They would also pick out ones who were healthy to go do some work. The ones who didn’t seem to healthy and not strong enough to work were told they were going to take a shower to clean themselves up. They were actually going to get killed. Right when they would walk in the room that they thought was a shower, they would walk in and get gassed.
Many of the nazi death camps were part of Aktion Reinhard, (Operation Reinhard) a Nazi plan to kill all of the 2 million Jews living in German-occupied Poland (Treblinka). Most of the death camps used gas chambers, a nazi favorite, to kill the prisoners. A gas chamber is a huge chamber that has pipes running through it. The Nazis would pipe deadly carbon monoxide into them, killing everyone inside. After they were dead, the Nazis would dump the bodies into mass graves, (huge pits) and dumped dirt over them.
Hitler used different methods to end people’s lives. Some of which were lethal injections and gas chambers. He set up concentration camps where people were held and forced to do hard work. Life in the camps was not the same everywhere. Certain factors affected the prisoners’ daily life. The people in charge of the camp and the nationality and category of prisoner affected a person’s life (Vincent Châtel). Along with concentration camps there were death camps. These were concentration camps designed for mass murder. There was a total of six death camps. The largest and most famous camp was Auschwitz, also known as
Concentration Camps were found throughout the area of German-obtained territories. In German, they were pronounced Konzentrationslager. Concentration camps were used to torture and kill those who didn’t fit in with the master race. Some of the most well-known camps were Auschwitz Birkenau, Belzec, Bergen Belsen, Buchenwald, Chelmno, Dachau, Ebensee, and Flossenbürg. At these concentration camps, Jews and other minorities were detained and subjected to physical and sexual abuse. When the Nazis began to feel like the Jews were no longer producing enough effort, the Jews would be sent to gas chambers or other forms of torturous deaths. According to statistics, there were around 1,200 camps in the German areas of control. To be transported to the camps, laborers were placed on railway carts with no extra space and possibly a bucket in the corner to use the bathroom. Many carts had laborers sitting on top of each other
The living conditions in the concentration camps were harsh and led people to their physical brink. They were ran by the Schutzstaffel (oftenly referred to as SS officers). These death camps are where a majority of the killings of Jewish people happened. The perimeter of the camps were lined by barbed wires and watch towers. People who died were put into mass graves after the bodies were looted for gold and other valuables. Prisoners worked for 12 hours daily, and those who were unfit to work these excruciatingly long shifts were taken and used for horrific pseudo-scientific experimentation (Aladin Project). The mass graves were normally set to fire and burned every body. The experiments were gruesome and inhumane in almost every regard. These are many reasons how people died at these death camps.
A concentration camp is like a large prison where Germans were told to treat people very badly. Most died from malnutrition, illnesses, and even being beat too hard. Nazis were the reason why the Holocaust was terrible, they killed and tortured most
Surprisingly, the Nazis weren 't the first to use gas chambers as a killing method; in the 1920’s gas chambers were a legal execution method in the states of the United States.Victims of gas chambers were often unloaded from cattle cars and told they had to be disinfected in “showers.” The victims were ordered to enter with raised arms so as many people as possible could fit into the “shower.” The tighter the gas chambers were packed, the faster the victims suffocated. After the Germany’s invasion of the Soviet Union, the Nazis experimented with mobile gas chambers, gas vans,
The first concentration camp was established on December 7,1941 and that’s when the first victims of the extermination were killed. The Chelmno concentration camp killed all the Jews in the area besides in Lodz. Knowing where and when it was made, and what its purpose was, and how it affected Jews and others in it, can allow us to better understand the Chelmno death camp.
The gas chamber was a small confined room where jews were gassed with Zyklon B. The rooms were precisely 30 m long, 7 m wide, and 2.41 m high, giving a floor space of 210 m2. The ceiling consisted of about 22 cm reinforced concrete covered with 45 cm of earth. The gas chambers could hold up to about 2,000 jews in each one. The first gas chamber was built at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Majdanek, and elsewhere.
The prisoners held in the infamous Auschwitz concentration camp went through an abundance of physical challenges, pain and suffering that no human being should ever have to endure. What happened during the three years and four months that the camp was running has brought countries together to realize just how unjust the entire Holocaust was to minorities. SS officers would greet the Jews and Polish political prisoners, which included elderly and children, by numbering them and sorting them for the torture they were yet to go through. Prisoners either followed their orders or rebelled in hopes of it making a difference. Families were torn apart, friendships were seemingly broken, and soon they were
Since there were so many people dyeing every day, they built a gas chamber so big that it “could fit up to 2,000 people at a time” (Dwork and Pelt). Even though the gas chambers were effective, “they caused problems that needed complex solutions. At the time, they did not know where to put the copses so they put the prisoners in graves but it began to pollute the groundwater” (Dwork and Pelt). The gas chambers were originally used to kill stray animals but then were used to be a quick death for the prisoners. Even though “…murder was an important business at Auschwitz” (Dwork and Pelt), The gas chambers were the most brutal for the prisoners because it was a slow and painful
The prisoners would be held in a single cell in block 11. Food and water were withheld from them. Each day an SS officer would look through a peephole to see if the prisoners were still alive. About every other day the dead bodies would be removed. Auschwitz had gas chambers that were made to resemble showers. The unskilled people that arrived were told that they would be cleaned and to go to the showers. When they got in the doors they were immediately locked and the gas was turned on. In the gas chambers up to 1,500 people could be killed at one time, and it took from 10-20 minutes for the people to die. The Nazis used a cyanide gas, which was called Zyklon-B. This type of gas was manufactured by a pest-control company.